Academic literature on the topic 'Yeppoon'

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Journal articles on the topic "Yeppoon"

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Hathurusingha, Subhash, Nanjappa Ashwath, Kolitha Wijesekara, and David Midmore. "Reproductive phenology of Calophyllum inophyllum in Yeppoon, Australia and Meegoda Western Province, Sri Lanka." Journal of Forestry Research 22, no. 4 (May 13, 2011): 615–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11676-011-0169-5.

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Baniyounes, Ali, Gang Liu, M. G. Rasul, and M. M. K. Khan. "Review on Renewable Energy Potential in Australian Subtropical Region (Central and North Queensland)." Advanced Materials Research 347-353 (October 2011): 3846–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.347-353.3846.

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In Australia the future demand for energy is predicted to increase rapidly. Conventional energy resources soaring prices and environmental impact have increased the interest in renewable energy technology. As a result of that the Australian government is promoting renewable energy; such as wind, geothermal, solar and hydropower. These types of energy are believed to be cost-effective and environmentally friendly. Renewable energy availability is controlled by climatic conditions such as solar radiation, wind speed and temperature. This paper aims to assess the potential of renewable energy resources, in particular wind and solar energy in an Australian subtropical region (Central and North Queensland) namely, Gladstone, Emerald, Rockhampton, Yeppoon, Townsville, and Cairns. Analysis is done by using the latest statistical state of Queensland energy information, along with measured data history of wind speed, solar irradiations, air temperature, relative humidity, and atmospheric pressure for those sites. This study has also shown that national assessments of solar and wind energy potential can be improved by improving local climatic data assessments using spatial databases of Central and North Queensland areas.
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Bhatia, P., and N. Ashwath. "DEVELOPMENT OF A RAPID METHOD FOR MICROPROPAGATION OF A NEW PINEAPPLE [ANANAS COMOSUS (L.) MURR.] CLONE, 'YEPPOON GOLD'." Acta Horticulturae, no. 575 (April 2002): 125–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.17660/actahortic.2002.575.11.

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O’Dwyer, Niamh, Harrison Cliffe, Kaitlyn E. Watson, Elizabeth McCourt, and Judith A. Singleton. "The Forgotten Patients in Cyclones: The Continuation of Opioid Replacement Therapy Program." Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 34, s1 (May 2019): s53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x19001237.

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Introduction:Cyclones are expected to increase in frequency and intensity, significantly impacting communities and healthcare services. During these times, those with chronic diseases such as opioid dependence are at an increased risk of disease exacerbation due to treatment regimen interruptions. Disruptions to the continuity of the opioid replacement therapy (ORT) service can be detrimental to both clients and the community which can potentially lead to relapse, withdrawal, and risky behaviors.Aim:To explore the impacts of cyclones on opioid treatment programs within community and hospital pharmacies in Queensland.Methods:Qualitative research methods were used in this study with two methods of data analysis employed: the text analytics software, Leximancer®, and manual coding. Interviews were conducted with five hospital and five community pharmacists and four Queensland opioid treatment program (QOTP) employees. Participants worked in Mackay, Rockhampton, Townsville, and Yeppoon in a community impacted by a cyclone and involved with ORT supply.Results:The themes developed in the manual coding were “impact on essential services,” “human experience,” “healthcare infrastructure,” “preparedness,” and “interprofessional networks.” These themes were aligned with those identified in the Leximancer® analysis. The community pharmacists focused on client stability, whereas, the hospital pharmacists and QOTP employees focused on the need for disaster plans to be implemented.Discussion:The greatest concern for participants was maintaining the stability of their clients. Communication amongst the dosing sites and ORT stakeholders was most concerning. This led to a lack of dosing information in a timely manner with pharmacists being hesitant to provide doses and takeaways due to legislative restrictions. A review of coordinated efforts and the legislative constraints is recommended to ensure continuity of ORT supply during cyclones.
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Fergusson, C. L., R. A. Henderson, E. C. Leitch, and H. Ishiga. "Lithology and structure of the Wandilla terrane, Gladstone‐Yeppoon district, central Queensland, and an overview of the Palaeozoic subduction complex of the New England Fold Belt." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 40, no. 4 (August 1993): 403–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120099308728091.

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Mackey, AP. "Aspects of the limnology of Yeppen Yeppen Lagoon, central Queensland." Marine and Freshwater Research 42, no. 3 (1991): 309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/mf9910309.

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Aspects of the morphometry and physical and chemical limnology of Yeppen Yeppen Lagoon, in tropical Australia, have been investigated. The lagoon is a channel billabong lying in the old bed of the Fitzroy River. It has a relatively small, shallow and elongated basin. Seasonal variations in water temperature, light regime, oxygen concentration, pH and conductivity suggest that the lagoon exhibits a warm monomictic pattern of thermal stratification rather than a continuous warm polymictic one. The annual heat budget was 3294 calories cm-2 year-1. Maximum work of the wind was 238.8 g-cm cm-2, and maximum stability was 34.5 g-cm cm-2. Despite the apparently low stability of stratification, the lagoon remained thermally stratified for much of the year. Analysis of wind-distributed heat suggested that slow mixing was taking place even during periods of relatively high stability, although this mixing was insufficient to reoxygenate the hypolimnion, which remained anoxic for much of the year. Yeppen Yeppen Lagoon is likely to prove eutrophic, and it is suggested that primary productivity will be high because a large volume of the lagoon's water is well lit and a large sediment surface area is in contact with the epilimnion. Notes on the biota of Yeppen Yeppen Lagoon are also given.
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Lacey, Heather, Rachel Chen, Daniel Vuong, Michael S. Cowled, Ernest Lacey, Peter J. Rutledge, and Andrew M. Piggott. "Yeppoonic acids A – D: 1,2,4-trisubstituted arene carboxylic acid co-metabolites of conglobatin from an Australian Streptomyces sp." Journal of Antibiotics 75, no. 2 (December 9, 2021): 108–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41429-021-00493-4.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Yeppoon"

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Ganley, Maree Lillian. "Sea pictures of a convent boarding school: Oral histories of teachers and students at St Ursula’s Yeppoon 1917-1997." Thesis, Australian Catholic University, 2019. https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/06ecb1059f5e66851acc796298bbaad48a40f6af8aa3b4ad9eda2eb97dd3e6c0/4431717/Ganley_2019_Sea_pictures_of_a_convent_boarding.pdf.

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This thesis is a history of St Ursula’s Yeppoon, a Catholic boarding school on the central coast of Queensland that was established in 1917. The provision of adequate education in the scattered settlements of remote Queensland was low on the list of government priorities for the first hundred years of settlement in the colony and state secondary schools in those areas were not established until the 1960s, hence St Ursula’s played an important role in the education of girls in Queensland. The arrival in western central Queensland and eventually Yeppoon of a community of women religious known as the Presentation Sisters was a cultural clash in lifestyle, dress and curriculum for many children who had never seen nuns before and, in many cases, had not even been inside a classroom. Through interviews with eighty-five past staff and students of St Ursula’s, this thesis yields new perspectives on the complex interactions between gender, religion and class in the education of girls in religious institutions in remote Queensland through much of the twentieth century. The history’s main threads and themes of origin, leadership, formal education, culture and faith are viewed through the lens of personal memory as a multiplicity of experiences, perspectives, interpretations and subjectivities. This thesis employs the basic technique and the goals of oral history and incorporates oral history testimonies of a collection of stories and reminiscences of staff and students of St Ursula’s. This is in keeping with qualitative research methodology where there are multiple approaches as well as multiple types of oral history.1 The findings from this study challenge the widely held assumption that the teaching sisters were always complicit with the church’s view that a convent school education was ultimately a preparation for the role as a good Catholic wife and mother. In so doing, this thesis provides a richer and more nuanced account of the operation of the power and challenges facing religious educational institutions as they negotiated the rapid changes taking place in remote parts of Australia in the twentieth century. Its aim is to contribute to Australian educational history and to the history of secondary education in the vast remote regions of Queensland.
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(9895268), J. Hanley. "The continuation of the ethos of Nano Nagle and the Queensland Presentation Congregation in the documents of St Ursula's College, Yeppoon : a case study in document analysis." Thesis, 2002. https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/The_continuation_of_the_ethos_of_Nano_Nagle_and_the_Queensland_Presentation_Congregation_in_the_documents_of_St_Ursula_s_College_Yeppoon_a_case_study_in_document_analysis/13457348.

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Throughout Australia there has been a decline in the numbers of members of religious orders and congregations working in Catholic Schools. Although owned and governed by the Congregation of the Queensland Presentation Sisters, St Ursula's College, Yeppoon, is a school that has no direct daily contact with the Congregation. The College, founded· in 1918, has enjoyed a .long association with the Presentation Congregation, which itself was founded by Nano Nagle in Cork Ireland, in the late eighteenth century. Within the next five to ten years, however, it is very likely that, because of its declining numbers and the ageing of its members, the Congregation will no longer have a governing role in the College. Through a case study approach using a process of document analysis I address the question: "To what extent do the official public documents of St Ursula's College, Yeppoon, continue the ethos of Nano Nagle and the Queensland Presentation Congregation?" The research shows that in a wide variety of College documents there are many explicit and implicit references to the foundational values and ethos. A process of triangulation demonstrates the continuation of ethos from Nano Nagle to the Queensland Presentation Congregation and thence to St Ursula's College, Ycppoon. I also propose a simple and elegant theory of the continuation of ethos, positing that ethos is expressed through living out values, and that, while foundational values remain constant over time, the manner in which they are expressed is culturally and contextually conditioned. This case study has important implications for decisions about the future governance of the College. For example, the study addresses the issue of whether St Ursula's College can be a ''Presentation school" without the presence or direct influence of members of the Congregation, an issue which will become more pressing as new models of governance are explored in coming years. As well, this study will also assist St Ursula's College in its process of school renewal.
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(48991), Ajay Sharma. "Agroforestry systems for municipal effluent disposal." Thesis, 2008. https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Agroforestry_systems_for_municipal_effluent_disposal/21426489.

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Seven agroforestry (AF) systems namely Eucalyptus grandis Hill ex Maiden (flooded gum, E), Dendrocalamus latiflorus Munro (Ma bamboo, B) and Digitaria decumbens Stent (Pangola, P), and their mixed plantations (BE, BP, EP, BEP) were monitored during the initial two years of growth for their efficiency in effluent removal. The municipal effluent irrigated plantation trial was established on a 1.6 ha site in the Capricornia coastal region at Yeppoon, Queensland in June 2002. This site was monitored until June 2004 for changes in site hydrology, physical, chemical and microbial properties of soil, and for plant growth, biomass production and nutrient uptake. The residual maximum likelihood method (REML) and analysis of variance (ANOVA) were extensively used to statistically compare the changes.

The plantations were irrigated at a modelled conservative irrigation rate of 1.42 ML ha-1yr-1. The total water use of all the AF systems was four to six times of that provided via irrigation. The mixed AF systems used more water than monoculture AF systems. During the initial two years, all the AF systems were effective in utilising effluent (both water and nutrients) due to the presence of groundflora. Over time, the efficiency and total water use may decline with reduction in groundflora and photosynthetically active canopy.

The vegetation of these AF systems accumulated six to ten times the major nutrients supplied via effluent irrigation. However, the AF systems with the exception of the E system failed to take up the supplied sodium and sulphur. Progressive build up of sodium in the soil would introduce sodicity in the soil and this may restrict the long term use of effluent disposal site. The electrical conductivity (EC1.5) increased significantly in upper two soil layers whereas exchangeable sodium, CEC and ESP significantly increased over time in all the soil layers. Although soil compaction, reduction in infiltration rate, and increase in electrical conductivity and exchangeable sodium were observed at the site, the current changes did not indicate any ecological degradation. A long term study may help determine the optional rotation age of the AF crops to avoid adverse impact to the site.

Although the build up of microbiota in the effluent irrigated site increased considerably in all the AF systems, it did not reveal any health hazard. A study in mortality rates of different enteric bacteria indicated that the pathogens died within 15 days in winter and in less than 27 days in summer upon cessation of irrigation. Restricting access to the effluent irrigated site for up to 30 days would reduce the probability of a human health hazard due to the effluent irrigation.

At the conservative rate of irrigation (1.42 ML ha-1yr-1), the plantations produced up to 72 tonne biomass ha-1 (dry biomass) within 24 months. Largely, the biomass produced in the AF systems was non-woody, thus it would need non-conventional markets. Leaves were the major site of nutrient storage. Senescence of leaves and twigs may accelerate nutrient recycling and this may defeat the objective of effluent irrigation. Moreover, the plants were selective in nutrient sequestering. Not more than one kg ha-1 of any micro-nutrients was accumulated by bamboo and groundflora. For sustainability of effluent irrigation, the plantations may have to be either harvested in short rotation or irrigation has to be regulated according to plant growth. The commercial viability of the biomass produced in the AF systems was assessed to determine local suitability of the plantation models.

Canonical variate analysis (CVA), a type of multiple variate analysis, based on the combined data of various parameters showed differences between AF systems. These differences are likely to diverge with age of the plantations. The CVA based on more than four parameters showed differences amongst the AF systems. Moreover, the CVA for the datasets of some parameters collected at different time also revealed divergence amongst the AF systems. The analysis showed that the AF systems may develop contrasting differences with maturity. Monoculture E plantation produced more biomass than other AF systems, and it also accumulated more nutrients, compared to mixed AF systems. In contrast mixed AF systems (e.g., BP and BE) used more water than the monoculture systems. Overall, at 24 months, the mixed AF systems prove to offer improved benefits for effluent irrigation in terms of technical feasibility, ecological safety, and commercial viability of the effluent irrigated plantations.

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Books on the topic "Yeppoon"

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Australian Coal Preparation Conference (9th 2002 Yeppoon, Qld.). Proceedings of the Ninth Australian Coal Preparation Conference, Yeppoon, 13-17 October 2002. Edited by Firth Bruce and Australian Coal Preparation Society. [NSW]: Australian Coal Preparation Society, 2002.

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Lifelong Learning Conference (1st 2000 Yeppoon). Lifelong Learning Conference: Selected papers from the inaugural International Lifelong Learning Conference, Yeppoon, Central Queensland, Australia, 17-19 July 2000. Rockhampton: Central Queensland University, 2000.

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Bain-Fallon, Memorial Lectures (23rd 2001 Rockhampton Qld ). Respiratory and gastrointestinal medicine: Proceedings of the 23rd Bain-Fallon Memorial Lectures : 23-27 July 2001, Capricorn Resort, Yeppoon, Rockhampton, QLD. Artarmon, NSW: The Association, 2001.

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Lifelong Learning Conference (2nd 2002 Yeppoon, Qld.). International Lifelong Learning Conference: Refereed papers from the 2nd International Lifelong Learning Conference, Yeppoon, Central Queensland, Australia, 16-19 June 2002. Rockhampton, Qld: Lifelong Learning Committee, Central Queensland University Press, 2002.

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Sesang e yeppŭn kŏt. Sŏul-si: Maŭm Sanch'aek, 2012.

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Yi, Hyang-i. Halmŏni ŭi yeppŭn moja: Yi Hyang-i ŏrini rŭl wihan sijip. Sŏul: Mirinae, 1992.

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Hwiririk ttŏk hae mŏkki: Ch'oboja to shwipke mandŭnŭn mom e chok'o yeppŭn ttŏk. Sŏul T'ŭkpyŏlsi: Chosŏn Ilbo Saenghwal Midiŏ, 2009.

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Minnat i yeppŭn K'orian: Togirin Han'guk hakcha ŭi 50-yŏn Han'guk munhwa t'amsaek. Sŏul-si: Hakkojae, 2013.

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Yeppŭn yŏja mandŭlgi: Miin kangbak ŭi munhwasa, Han'guk esŏ miin ŭn ŏttŏk'e mandŭrŏ chŏnnŭn'ga. Sŏul-si: P'urŭn Yŏksa, 2011.

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Chi-gwŏn, Ha, ed. Chŭlgŏun sop'ung: Bŏsŭ t'ago chŏnch'ŏl tago airang hamkke kanŭn sŏul ŭi yeppŭn chŏlchip 20. Kyŏnggi-do Koyang-si: Taesup Param, 2006.

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